Bem, de acordo com para NotebookCheck.net você tem uma porta Thunderbolt no laptop específico que você mencionou.
Página Reddit DIY eGPU 101: Introdução ao eGPU também sugere que ter Thunderbolt é um muito bom lugar para começar com eGPU mas não é de forma alguma uma garantia.
A melhor resposta que você vai conseguir é "talvez" junto com "você terá que tentar e nos dizer".
A partir desse Reddit:
I read all of this, am I ready to order my eGPU? How do I know that it will actually work for my system?
Well, as I wrote above, if you can find someone's worklog/guide with the same Laptop as you and using the same enclosure, then you typically have a good idea of what you need to do. Just follow in their footsteps as accurately as possible. If you're pioneering on a laptop nobody tried before, then you're running the risk of not being able to get it to work. In general, Thunderbolt is the easiest one to get working, followed by Expresscard, and finally M.2 and mPCIe. It is a good idea to make the smallest investment possible, such as getting an adapter/enclosure, a suitable power supple and a placeholder video card (or borrow one, if you can). That way you won't be spending on a video card before you are sure your system is eGPU capable. Once the simple card works, you can buy the actual eGPU of your dreams. If it doesn't you didn't waste more than you had to in order to figure that out.